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100 Days after Childhood

Thursday, 22 May 2014 from 19:00 to 22:00 (BST)

Ticket Information

Event Details

'It [the summer camp] was a place where you felt cast adrift... I think it's so important that children have time for the development of their soul-life – which just doesn't happen any more – time without worrying about achieving things, worrying about making money, just time to feel free.' From an interview with Sergei Solovyov at the 3rd Russian Film Festival, London 2009.'Hello Summer' reads the sign above the camp assembly point at the start of One Hundred Days after Childhood. Set during one summer at a Soviet Young Pioneer camp and split into short chapters with names like 'Sunstroke' and 'Education of Feeling', the film languorously follows 14-year-old Mitya's first love, the despair and hopelessness of it acutely rendered through a shimmering watercolour palette and a dream-like repetitive score. Young Pioneer Camps were set up in 1925 and by 1973 (two years before the film was shot) there were approximately 40,000 camps throughout the Soviet Union, with around 9,300,000 children having had a vacation at a camp that year. Apart from providing a reprieve in nature, and freedom from work and family constraints, the camps created an egalitarian environment for – as the director of the film, Sergei Solovyov called it – 'youthful foolishness', a place that preserved the sacred space and time of being young.One Hundred Days after Childhood won the Silver Bear at the Berlin Film Festival in 1975.1975, Soviet Union, colour, 94 minutesProduction: MosfilmDirected by: Sergei SolovyovWritten by: Aleksand AleksandrovPhotography: Leonid KalashnikovCast: Boris Tokarev, Tatyana Drubich, Irina Malysheva, Yuri Agilin, Sergei Shakurov and othersSubtitles kindly provided by Konstantin ("Kai") Ryabitsev.

Thank you to Mosfilm for granting their permission for this screening.

Organised by Anna Galkina. This event runs as part of the Cinema6: Three Experiments in Translation programme.

Advanced tickets will be available through the website. A limited number will be available on the door.

Thursday, 22 May 2014 from 19:00 to 22:00 (BST)

Organiser

Cinema6 is a new neighbourhood cinema for Peckham running for six weeks this spring. Transforming a railway arch into a 40 seat screen, Cinema6 is showing films four times a week, from classic blockbusters and family films to world cinema and the work of local artists. It's a place to watch, discuss and learn about film and film making. We’re inviting everyone from the area to be involved in choosing which films to show and to bring ideas for creative uses of the cinema space.